Individualism and Freedom

Individualism and Freedom

INDIVIDUALITY AND FREEDOM: FROM AESTHETIC INDIVIDUALISM TO A MODERN APPROACH Heath Spong* ABSTRACT: This article provides a detailed study of the conceptual relationship between individuality and freedom. While individual- ity is often recognized as a valuable aspect of human life, its rela- tionship to a social state of freedom is rarely examined. On closer inspection, there are various tensions between individuality and freedom. This article begins by introducing Mill’s theory of indi- viduality and freedom, also known as the philosophy of aesthetic individualism. It then provides an explanation of the weakness of Mill’s approach, demonstrating inconsistencies between Mill’s * Department of Economics, University of Iowa. This paper grew out of a fellow- ship in the Program on the Foundations of the Market Economy, in the Department of Economics at New York University. I am particularly grateful for the early en- couragement of Mario Rizzo to pursue the topic, and for the detailed written com- ments later provided to me by Paul Dower. An earlier draft of the paper also bene- fited from presentation and discussion at the Colloquium on Market Processes and Institutions at New York University, and was improved by the thoughtful comments and suggestions from Klark Durant, Sanford Ikeda, Chidem Kurdas, Elisabeth Kreke, Maria Paganelli, Thomas McQuade, Joe Salerno, Michael Schwartz, and Gail But- torff. Finally, I would like to gratefully acknowledge the funding of the Bradley Foundation, and the SEED Research Grant from Royal Melbourne Institute of Tech- nology. The shortcomings that persist are my responsibility. 1 2 New York University Journal of Law & Liberty [Vol. 6:1 vision of individuality, and the functioning of a free society. These criticisms and alternative interpretation are drawn from the work of Hayek. The third section of the article attempts to transcend the li- mitations of Mill’s approach by offering an updated interpretation of individuality. This approach combines the understanding of in- dividuality provided by Mill with that of Hayek, in an effort to overcome the specific weaknesses identified in section two. The modern approach builds on a scientific basis of individuality, an economic understanding of institutional costs and collective action problems, and proposes an alternative interpretation of how indi- viduality can flourish without threatening the freedoms engen- dered by social order. It is hoped that this modern perspective might reconcile dissenting views on this important topic, and show that the possibility of a free and peaceful society, composed of indi- viduals “of all types”, still remains feasible. TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction.............................................................................................. 4 II. Aesthetic Individualism ................................................................... 10 A. Early Aesthetics and the Individual .......................................... 10 1. The Classical Greeks and the Aesthetic Education.................................................................................. 10 2. Kant and Freedom through Aesthetics .................................. 12 3. Schiller, the Aesthetic Education and Freedom .................................................................................... 13 B. Humboldt and Aesthetic Individualism.................................... 16 C. Mill, Liberty, and Individuality.................................................. 22 D. Individuality and Freedom......................................................... 31 II. The Conflict between Individuality and Freedom........................ 32 A. Individuality and Constructivist Rationality ........................... 33 B. Individuality versus Freedom as Spontaneous Order ......................................................................................... 38 C. Hayek’s Individual: Strengths and Weaknesses ...................... 42 D. The Need for Individuality? ....................................................... 46 IV. A Modern Approach to Individuality and Freedom ........................................................................................... 48 2011] Individuality and Freedom 3 A. Understanding Individuality......................................................49 1. The Scientific Basis of individuality........................................50 2. Two Functional Levels of Individuality .................................54 B. Rationality and Individuality ......................................................60 1. Individuality and Non-Constructivist Rationality.................................................................................60 2. Individuality and Rational Agreement ..................................66 C. Individuality, Spontaneous Order, and Freedom.....................................................................................71 1. Individuality and Informal Social Structures ........................72 2. Homogenous Behavior and Social Mechanisms ..............................................................................80 3. Individuality and the State.......................................................85 VI. Conclusions.......................................................................................91 If the claims of individuality are ever to be asserted, the time is now, while much is still wanting to complete the en- forced assimilation. It is only in the earlier stages that any stand can be successfully made against the encroachment. The demand that all other people shall resemble ourselves, grows by what it feeds on. If resistance waits till life is re- duced nearly to one uniform type, all deviations from that type will come to be considered impious, immoral, even monstrous and contrary to nature. Mankind speedily be- come unable to conceive diversity, when they have been for some time unaccustomed to see it. -John Stuart Mill1 Paradoxical as it may appear, it is probably true that a suc- cessful free society will always in a large measure be a tra- dition-bound society. -Friedrich A Hayek2 1 JOHN STUART MILL, ON LIBERTY 139 (The Walter Scott Publishing Co. 1919) (1859). 2 FRIEDRICH A. HAYEK, THE CONSTITUTION OF LIBERTY, 61 (1960). 4 New York University Journal of Law & Liberty [Vol. 6:1 INTRODUCTION John Stuart Mill’s proclamation in support of individuality re- mains as relevant and important today as it was when he wrote it in 1859. The capacity for society to receive diversity among its people remains valuable from many different perspectives. The more soci- ety can tolerate differences between individuals the greater is the freedom of choice that can exist. The more that a society can peace- fully embrace these differences the greater the degree of social har- mony that might be obtained. Furthermore, acceptance of diversity among individuals has implications for the livelihood of social groups: if the society can accept individuality, then minority groups might also be respected.3 The peaceful existence of individuality among the population is therefore a central ingredient in freedom of choice, social acceptance, and the existence of minority rights. It is unfortunate that society is still grappling with these issues, and thus Mill’s concern for the preservation of individuality across society is an imperative that has not diminished with time. In this sense, Mill’s concern is now our concern.4 3 A later section of the present article will argue that one of Mill’s motivations in emphasising individuality was to simultaneously protect the rights of the minority. The individual, in Mill’s perspective, is the smallest of minorities. Protection of the individual might be extended to minority groups also as, at least conceptually, there are some similarities between dissenting individuals and dissenting groups. Mill’s allusion to this is discussed in a later section. 4 This very point has been recently recognized by legal scholar Jeremy Waldron, who also highlights the connection between Mill’s arguments, and modern voices in support of diverse community: Nor is it hard to see continuity between Mill’s concerns in On Liberty, and the concerns of those argue in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries for a diverse society with a citizenry of disparate ethnic and national origins, a society in which many cultures are embraced, in which people are respected for their cultural identity, in which both the state and the members of its eth- nic and national majority (if there is one) go out of their way to tolerate and accommodate practices that are quite different from their own. Jeremy Waldron, Mill and Multiculturalism, in MILL’S ON LIBERTY: A CRITICAL GUIDE 165, 165–84 (C. L. Ten ed., 2008). The tendency of laws and social norms to constrain forms of individual expression certainly changes over time, but does not necessarily disappear. A recent example of 2011] Individuality and Freedom 5 In keeping with Mill’s passionate argument, many modern theorists across social science have indeed recognized, in some cases explicitly, the importance of individuality to society. This acknowledgment has emerged either through direct reference to individuality and autonomy of individuals, or indirectly through analysis of individual opportunity.5 The specific focus of these discussions has included the value of individuality and the social restrictions on individual consumption decisions comes from Barton Beebe, who has argued that a modern form of sumptuary code is emerging through intellectual

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